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"Gulliver awoke to discover his predicament all at once, whereas Americans are only now beginning to see the thousands of irrational political restraints that have hogtied and immobilized them stealthily over decades.

"It's time to wake up, folks. The politicians and bureaucrats who unfortunately control the U.S. government are doing everything they can to keep us - and our money - here.

"But it is our legal right to 'go offshore' financially.

"Big Brother can put as many roadblocks, detours, dead ends, and petty controls as he wants in your path, but that doesn't have to stop you - nor should it - from going offshore.

"The U.S. government - especially the IRS - has done all it can to keep you and your money at home.

"The U.S. Department of Justice and the IRS claim the SEC has extra-territorial magical powers. Apparently, SEC rules extend to all offshore financial activity involving U.S. persons, including banks and investment managers - even those located outside the United States.

"And the IRS, with its 'qualified intermediary' rules, claims U.S. jurisdiction over foreign banks with U.S. clients. The QI program obligates foreign banks to follow IRS disclosure rules - even if they go against their own nation's financial privacy laws.

"Then, of course, there's the recently enacted HIRE Act. This law contains the radical Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) that grants the IRS power to force foreign bankers to spy on their U.S. clients. Unless a foreign bank agrees to tell the IRS about the foreign financial accounts of U.S. persons, the IRS threatens to levy a 30% withholding tax on the bank's U.S.-sourced income. This includes any U.S. securities or U.S. dollars the bank may hold.

"And now, bit by bit, the U.S. government is also tightening the investment, capital, and currency noose, in effect imposing 'soft' currency controls without proclaiming them as such. That's why restrictive U.S. securities laws have hindered Americans from easily investing offshore.

"Here's the good news: Going 'offshore' is an effective way for you to circumvent restrictive laws and regulations - and even expand your wealth.

"The No. 1 reason to go offshore is not simply because you can. It's because you must. It's the only way to get around Big Brother.

"As the U.S. government flexes its regulatory muscle, offshore investing is one of the last remaining ways for smart investors to legitimately safeguard their wealth.

"Now more than ever, it's important to consider these opportunities. There are simply too many new global centers of wealth and power to be ignored.

"Indeed, for Americans, offshore tax savings can be minimal because 'U.S. persons' are taxed on all their worldwide income, no matter where it is earned.

"But you should still consider going offshore. Here's why...

1) Solid Asset Protection

"The United States leads all other nations in lawsuits. Lawsuits seek cash and assets. If your assets are located in the U.S., they're at the mercy of any state or federal court.

"But if they're located offshore, a plaintiff's attorney usually won't take the case. They know they're not likely to collect a judgment. (Sometimes it makes good financial sense to discourage a potential litigant by letting him know just how difficult it will be to reach your offshore assets.)

"Because of defendant-friendly local laws in asset protection and tax haven nations, foreign judgment holders have a difficult time enforcing it. To reach your assets, a successful creditor must start all over, using the foreign judicial process to press a claim. That means the expense of hiring foreign lawyers and paying for travel and witness transportation.

2) Flexible Planning

"Having some of your assets offshore allows more flexible tax planning and inheritance tax advantages, such as the establishment of an asset protection trust (APT), a private family foundation, or a limited liability company (LLC) for business purposes, each of which could have its own bank accounts.

3) Better Privacy

"Offshore accounts offer you a way of legally concealing your wealth from prying eyes (other than government reports that are required). In addition to avoiding becoming a target for extortion and kidnapping campaigns, you may well want to avoid news media attention or relatives or others looking for handouts.

"Protecting your assets offshore is a great way to preserve your wealth. But you can also invest your money offshore to increase your wealth. There are several ways to do this.

"An offshore bank account is an excellent platform from which to diversify investments, with instant access to the world's best investment opportunities, including currencies, precious metals, and real estate, and without being limited by Big Brother's anti-investment restrictions. Foreign stock, bond, and mutual fund trading is not covered by SEC rules.

"You can also buy foreign securities through a trust, a family foundation, or a corporation you have created offshore. Properly structured foreign legal entities are not considered 'U.S. residents, persons, or citizens.' These entities therefore have the right to buy non-SEC-registered securities (as long as the grantor who creates such entities includes income from these sources as personal income on annual tax returns).

"You can set up an offshore brokerage account. The profit potential of cross-border investment is enormous. Until the recession, U.S. stocks performed well over the years, but international stock markets historically have outperformed Wall Street as a whole. And now, a lot of American investors are also opening up brokerage accounts overseas so they can trade stocks directly on foreign exchanges and tap into the greatest possible returns.

"These are all compelling reasons to go offshore. Just remember, the IRS has a web of rules and regulations that aim to wring maximum revenue from Americans who go offshore. These tax laws are extremely complex, so move cautiously and only with expert professional advice."

Kathleen Peddicord

Editor's Note: Attorney Bob Bauman, editor of the Sovereign Society's Offshore A-Letter, will join us in Panama City in December for our Emergency Offshore Summit, where he and our other key offshore experts convened for this important and timely event will discuss in detail all the best current opportunities for protecting your wealth and safe-guarding your assets.

Full details of the program we're planning are here.Continue Reading

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Dear Live and Invest Overseas Reader,

Before you can begin to consider where best you might relocate overseas, you've got to get to know yourself better. What's important to you? What things would you miss from your current life if they weren't part of your new one?

What services, amenities, niceties, and distractions could you not live without? What hassles, hurdles, frustrations, and difficulties would you find intolerable?

For example...

    Regarding the Climate:

  • Do you enjoy a change of seasons?     
  • Would you be unhappy without regular sunshine?     
  • Do you mind rain?    
  • Can you handle heat? Humidity?    
  • Do you prefer a varying length of day?

    Regarding Infrastructure:

  • Do you lose your cool if you can't send an e-mail the first time every time you try?     
  • Does your work require reliable Internet service 24 hours a day, seven days a week?     
  • Would you mind living on a dirt road?     
  • Would you mind your road access being temporarily cut off during the rainy season?  
  • Do you need American television?  
  • Would you be unhappy if you couldn't watch football on Sunday afternoons?  
  • Are you afraid of the dark? In much of the world, electricity isn't 100% reliable.  
  • Would you be comfortable owning a car and driving yourself around in a new country? If not, think about places where you could afford a full-time driver or where a car is unnecessary?  
  • Would you want to travel outside the country often, either to visit family back home or generally? If so, consider how far it is to the nearest international airport.  
  • Would you be unhappy without your favorite comfort foods? If so, consider places with access to international-standard grocery stores.

    Regarding Access "Back Home":

  • Do you have children or grandchildren you want to see regularly?
  • Are you going to be keeping a home in the country where you're moving from?
  • Will you have some ongoing business concerns in other countries?

    Regarding Language:

  • Do you speak a second one?
  • Are you terrified at the thought of learning a new one?

    When It Comes To How You Like To Spend Your Time:

  • What's your favorite thing to do on a Friday night?
  • How would you rather spend a free Sunday afternoon--in a museum or taking a long walk in the woods?
  • How regularly do you want to be able to dine out? To watch a first-run movie in English? To visit an art gallery or attend the theater?
  • What would you like to see from your bedroom window? The ocean? A mountainside covered with wildflowers? A vineyard? A busy street scene?

    Regarding Taxes:

  • From where will you derive your income in retirement?
  • Will you have earned pension, dividend, interest, rental, or capital gains income to account for? The source of your income has a lot to do with your ultimate tax liability, especially if you're an American.

    Regarding Safety:

  • Are you a woman moving alone?
  • Are you moving with young children?
  • Do protests bother you? The French, for example, seem to assemble to make a point at the drop of a beret.
  • Do you speak the local language? If you do, situations that might otherwise seem frightening won't bother you. If you don't, you may sometimes feel uncomfortable even if there's really no cause for worry.
  • Have you traveled much internationally? If yes, again, you're probably better prepared for what otherwise might seem worrisome situations.
Considering these kinds of questions is perhaps the most important part of planning a retirement abroad. Be honest with yourself (and, critically, with your significant other if you'll be making the move together).

If you know you don't like rainy days, for example, strike Ireland from your list.

If you thrive on cosmopolitan distractions, don't think about the hinterlands of Ecuador.

If your eyes begin to twitch at the thought of an unreliable Internet connection, forget about much of Nicaragua.

If you don't speak French and have no interest in trying to learn, I'd suggest that rural France is not the place for you.

If humidity makes you irritable, don't plan your new life in Panama City.

Etc.

Kathleen Peddicord

P.S. This "Retire Overseas Questionnaire" is excerpted from my book How To Retire Overseas, available in bookstores in the United States and online here.Continue Reading:

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Kathleen Peddicord

Kathleen Peddicord is the founder of the Live and Invest Overseas publishing group. With more than 25 years experience covering this beat, Kathleen reports daily on current opportunities for living, retiring, and investing overseas in her free e-letter.

Her book, How To Retire Overseas—Everything You Need To Know To Live Well Abroad For Less, was recently released by Penguin Books.

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